Category: XFINITY Series

NASCAR XFINITY Series news and information

  • Kevin Harvick No. 4 Nationwide Series Advance – Kansas Speedway

    Kevin Harvick No. 4 Nationwide Series Advance – Kansas Speedway

    Kevin Harvick

    No. 4 Hunt Brothers Pizza Chevrolet Impala

    NASCAR Nationwide Series Race 30 of 34 – Kansas Speedway

    TRIPLE THREAT: Kevin Harvick Inc. (KHI) co-owner Kevin Harvick will be behind the wheel of the No. 4 Hunt Brothers Pizza Chevrolet Impala, as a third NASCAR Nationwide Series entry for the KHI stable this weekend at Kansas Speedway. Saturday’s race will mark Harvick’s third and final appearance in the No. 4 Chevrolet this season. In eight starts in the series at the 1.5-mile track, the driver has gathered one win (2006), one pole (2008), five top-five and five top-10 finishes.

    SEARCHING FOR A WIN: KHI entries have made nine starts at Kansas Speedway in the Nationwide Series. With fourth-place results, Harvick (2010 and 2009) and NASCAR Sprint Cup Series driver Tony Stewart (2006) share the record for the organization’s best finish at the 1.5-mile Kansas City, Kan., facility.

    THE GREAT RACE: Don’t miss your chance to head to victory lane with Hunt Brothers Pizza in The Great Race. All you have to do is eat your favorite Hunt Brothers Pizza, clip and save your proofs of purchase and watch the prizes roll in! Eat, play and win is our motto. Visit www.hbpracing.com for complete contest information and your chance to win great Hunt Brothers Racing prizes autographed by Hunt Brothers Racing drivers Harvick and Elliott Sadler. The Great Race ends November 20 so be sure to start filling up on great pizza and prizes today.

    CHASSIS HISTORY: The No. 4 KHI team, under the command of crew chief Bruce Cook, will utilize chassis No. 080 this weekend at Kansas Speedway. This chassis has yet to compete on track, but has been through wind-tunnel testing.

    NO. 4 PREVIOUS RACE RECAP: Harvick took over driving duties of the No. 4 OneMain Financial Chevrolet Impala at Daytona International Speedway on July 1. One of four KHI entries for the Nationwide Series race, Harvick qualified his Chevrolet Impala on the pole and remained near the front of the field for the majority of the event before being shuffled out of the top 10 late in the race. Harvick and the No. 4 OneMain Financial Chevrolet avoided the wild multi-car accident which occurred as the race ended and walked away with an 18th-place finish.

    HARVICK’S THOUGHTS ON KANSAS:

    What are your thoughts going into the Nationwide Series race at Kansas Speedway?

    “I’m really looking forward to getting behind the wheel of the Hunt Brothers Pizza Chevrolet Impala this weekend. I enjoy racing at Kansas Speedway. I have one Nationwide win at the track so far, so it’s safe to say Kansas has been good to me. The track reminds me a lot of Chicagoland Speedway, only the bumps are in different places, and we have done well there too. All that, coupled with the fact that our intermediate-track program has been pretty good this year, I think we should do well this weekend.”

    About Hunt Brothers Pizza:

    With more than 6,500 locations in 28 states, Hunt BrothersR Pizza is the nation’s largest brand of made-to-order pizza in the convenience store industry. Perfect for today’s on-the-go lifestyle, Hunt Brothers Pizza offers regular, thin crust, and breakfast pizzas with All Toppings No Extra ChargeR, plus the Hunt BrothersR Wings in Southern Style and Hot ‘n Spicy flavors. Family owned and operated for over 40 years and headquartered in Nashville, Tenn., the company provides all of the food products, marketing programs, equipment and training for convenience stores to operate their own turnkey pizza program.

  • NASCAR And Goodyear Extend Agreement

    NASCAR And Goodyear Extend Agreement

    Goodyear To Continue As Exclusive Tire Supplier Through 2017

    NEW YORK, New York (Oct. 3, 2011) – NASCAR and the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company today jointly announced they have signed an extended agreement for Goodyear to continue as the exclusive tire used in NASCAR’s top three racing series for the next five years.

    The agreement, which extends through the 2017 season, renews Goodyear as the “Exclusive Tire Supplier” of the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, the NASCAR Nationwide Series and the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. Goodyear has had an uninterrupted commitment to NASCAR since becoming a race tire supplier in the 1950s, making it one of the longest-running supply programs in any sport. In addition, Goodyear has been the exclusive tire supplier for all three of the circuit’s top series since 1997.

    “Our longtime relationship with Goodyear is a testament to the company’s consistent high-quality tire it supplies the race teams,” said Jim O’Connell, NASCAR’s chief sales officer. “Not only are they experts in tire performance, but they are also a brand that understands how to effectively engage and connect with our fans through creative activation.”

    “This extension is the continuation of a relationship between experts,” said Pierre Jambon, vice president of Goodyear’s off-highway business. “NASCAR is clearly the expert in stock car racing, and it has chosen Goodyear because of our expertise in delivering outstanding performance. Our tire performance on the track validates our brand, inspires confidence for drivers and helps create exciting racing for fans. We are proud to continue to be an integral part of NASCAR.”

    About NASCAR

    The National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing, Inc. (NASCAR) is the sanctioning body for one of North America’s premier sports. NASCAR races are broadcast in more than 150 countries and in 20 languages. In the U.S., races are broadcast on FOX, TNT, ABC/ESPN/ESPN2, SPEED and SiriusXM Satellite Radio. NASCAR fans are among the most brand loyal in all of sports, and as a result more Fortune 100 companies participate in NASCAR than any other sport. NASCAR consists of three national series (the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series, NASCAR Nationwide Series, and NASCAR Camping World Truck Series), four regional series, and one local grassroots series, as well as two international series. Also part of NASCAR is GRAND-AM Road Racing, known for its competition on road courses with multiple classes of cars. NASCAR sanctions more than 1,200 races at 100 tracks in more than 30 U.S. states, Canada and Mexico. Based in Daytona Beach, Fla., NASCAR has offices in eight cities across North America. The next NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race, the third in the Chase for the NASCAR Sprint Cup, is the Hollywood Casino 400 in Kansas City, Kan., which will air Oct. 9 on ESPN at 2:00 p.m. ET. For more information and a complete schedule, visit http://www.nascar.com www.nascar.com. Follow NASCAR on http://www.facebook.com/NASCAR www.facebook.com/NASCAR or on Twitter: @NASCAR.

    About Goodyear

    Goodyear is one of the world’s largest tire companies. It employs approximately 73,000 people and manufactures its products in 54 facilities in 22 countries around the world. Its two Innovation Centers in Akron, Ohio and Colmar-Berg, Luxembourg strive to develop state-of-the-art products and services that set the technology and performance standard for the industry. For more information about Goodyear, go to http://www.goodyear.com/corporate www.goodyear.com/corporate.

  • Travis Pastrana Renews NASCAR Commitment During Recovery

    Travis Pastrana, who was so seriously injured during an attempted freestyle X-game trick on his motorcycle, renewed his commitment to NASCAR racing during an appearance in the media center at Dover International Speedway.

    [media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”222″][/media-credit]And although the action sports super star was still hobbling on crutches, he was thrilled to be back at the track, especially at the Monster Mile.

    “I was real excited to come out here to Dover because this is like my hometown track,” Pastrana said. “This is the first time I’ve been able to see it really up close. I definitely am disappointed to not be out there driving for sure.”

    In spite of his disappointment to not be out on the track, Pastrana has every intention of getting back behind the wheel of his No. 99 Boost Mobile Toyota for Pastrana Waltrip Racing in the Nationwide Series as soon as possible.

    “Right now recovery has been slow but going well I guess,” Pastrana said. “I get the pins out on Monday, which is always nice.”

    “Hopefully, I get all the pins out and start getting in the pool and be able to get down to the shop a little more,” Pastrana continued. “I want to drive the I-racing simulator a little bit more. I’ll do whatever I can to get back driving cars as soon as possible.”

    Pastrana will not be able to race at Daytona, however, his plan is to make his Nationwide debut at Phoenix. Although Boost will continue as his sponsor next year, providing twenty races at present, Pastrana hopes to race as many different types of cars and as many different series as possible.

    “Not being able to start out at Daytona and not being able to run the entire Nationwide Series is definitely a disappointment,” Pastrana said. “But we’re basically looking to do as many as we can do.”

    “I’m trying to do as many Nationwide and K&N and any kind of car races I can to get as much experience as I can,” Pastrana continued. “I haven’t really finalized all the deals for next year but I’m really hoping to get more than less I guess.”

    “The goal is definitely the same, to race as much as possible,” Pastrana said. “We just have to work out the sponsorship. My goal is to get in as many cars as possible.”

    Pastrana has experienced many lessons learned by being injured an unable to race. Although disappointed, he has also gained invaluable experience that he would not have had otherwise.

    “Definitely sitting on the sidelines and not racing, every time I watch a race, the disappointment is there,” Pastrana said. “It’s a small positive, but I’ve been able to watch all the races.”

    “I’ve been able to watch all the drivers,” Pastrana continued. “I actually know a lot more about who runs up front and who runs aggressive and who doesn’t, which drivers tend to stay up there at the end, and which drivers tend to qualify well.”

    “It’s been a great learning experience but I would much rather have been learning on the track of course.”

    Although he will not be officially racing until into the 2012 season, Pastrana does plan on doing some testing in his race car as soon as possible.

    “Doctors say that I’ll be walking in a month,” Pastrana said. “And I figure as soon as I can walk, I can drive. Put me in coach.”

    With all this talk of NASCAR racing, is the XGames superstar done with that chapter of his life?

    “To be perfectly honest, I was supposed to do my exit from the X-games,” Pastrana said. “That was not exactly the exit that I was looking for.”

    “I will not be on a bike this next year and do not plan to be on it for X games ever,” Pastrana continued. “But at the same time, motorcycling is something I’ll always do for training.”

    “Whether I’ll be riding at a competitive level, I sincerely doubt it,” Pastrana said. “But with Red Bull and a lot of the stuff they have in years to come, I’ll never say I will never do motorcycle stuff again.”

    “It’s who I am,” Pastrana continued. “But at the same time, this is my number one priority for the next two years. And then we can assess what life is going to bring.”

    Pastrana has also been busy with another project, filming the Nitro Circus 3-D movie. This too, however, has seemed to solidify for the action sports phenomenon that those days are over, with only racing ahead as his new goal.

    “We just finished filming Nitro Circus 3D movie, which Waltrip Racing had helped us with many products along the way,” Pastrana said. “For me, as soon as that movie is done filming and I have to do a little press for that, my action sports career is done.”

    “But as far as anything taking risks, I’m definitely going to be in this car and do the best I can to put my best foot forward,” Pastrana continued. “It was the most disappointing thing in my life to not only have myself but an entire team waiting for me and banking on me being in the car.”

    “I see the guys around the track and they’re all on different teams,” Pastrana said. “It’s tough because not only did we lose some of the top guys but a lot of friends had to find other work. Definitely something that I took to heart and I don’t want to happen ever again.”

    As soon as Pastrana has his pins removed, his intense rehabilitation will being. This will include time in the pool, as well as bicycling, based on whatever his ankle will tolerate.

    “I’m sure it will start out for an hour or two a day and work up from there,” Pastrana said. “My only job right now is to get that ankle healthy and to learn a little bit about the car.”

    “We’ll be doing physical therapy as much as that ankle will tolerate it without making it swell.”

    But even with his injury, one that he characterized as “the biggest failures” that he has ever experienced, Pastrana acknowledged that it has just made him even more focused on his upcoming racing career.

    “It’s been really frustrating but fortunately or unfortunately, I’ve been in a lot of pain the first month,” Pastrana said. “ It hurt to have the foot down.”

    “So, I’ve been watching a lot of NASCAR,” Pastrana said. “For better or for worse, it was a good learning experience.”

  • Ford Dover Nationwide Quotes

    Ford Dover Nationwide Quotes

    MUSTANG REACHES VICTORY LANE FOR 11TH TIME THIS SEASON

    Carl Edwards won his seventh NASCAR Nationwide Series race of the season.

    Ricky Stenhouse Jr. extended his points lead to 22 over Elliott Sadler with five races remaining.

    The win was the 11th for Mustang and Ford, most among manufacturers.

    Ford also took the manufacturer’s point lead with today’s win and now leads Toyota by four.

    Ford Finishing Results

    1st – Carl Edwards

    5th – Ricky Stenhouse Jr.

    6th – Trevor Bayne

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang – VICTORY LANE INTERVIEW – “It’s great. I have to thank Fastenal, Bodyguard, all the folks that are on the car. I went to Fastenal this week and I bought a neat Milwaukee tool set and I did a little work around the house and it was a lot of fun, so I appreciate these guys being on board. I’ve got to thank Ford. This Mustang was great. We’ve got Nex-gen oil on this thing. I got something on the grille and the oil temp was 320 degrees or something and that’s recycled oil we won the race with, so that’s great. All of the fans, Aflac Insurance and Nationwide. This series is so much fun. This track is so much fun and everything went great, other than my backflip, which was terrible. I was nervous about doing it on the banking, but it was just an awesome day.”

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR. – No. 6 Blackwell Angus/Cargill Ford Mustang – “It was pretty uneventful. We weren’t happy with our Blackwell Angus Beef and Cargill Mustang the whole time, but we were good enough to run near the top five. There at the end with the way the caution fell and what our guys did on pit road we got up there and was able to run in the top five. We’ll have to go to work on it. We weren’t happy with it, but it was a good points day for us. We ran strong all day and didn’t make any mistakes and that’s really what we need to do.”

    YOU HAD A CLOSE CALL WITH THE 11 COMING ON TO PIT ROAD. WHAT HAPPENED? “I don’t know. I thought he was gonna pass me there down the back straightaway and then he kind of lifted and I was waving my hand. I think his crew chief probably told him that they were gonna pit too. I got to pit road really good and all of a sudden I kind of heard something on the outside of me and I looked just at the time he was hitting the barrels and I tried to ease over far enough left so that we didn’t get hit in the right rear. It was pretty crazy and a close call for sure.”

    NOT A PERFECT DAY BUT A TOP FIVE. “The points lead is good, but we definitely weren’t as strong as we wanted to be. Our Blackwell Angus Beef and Cargill Mustang was pretty solid all day it just wasn’t great. We’ll go to work and make it better, but the guys on pit road and the guys back at the shop work really hard and it’s cool we can get another top five here this year.”

    DID THE TRACK THROW YOU A CURVE? “It was cool weather the last time we were here and it seemed to free up for us, so we started that first run and were a little too tight. I thought maybe it was going to come to us and it never really did. We were just a little too tight all day from the center off the corner. We could run fast laps, but it was just tough to pass them. Overall, it was a good day for us.”

    ARE YOU MORE HAPPY ABOUT BEATING THE 2 AND 32 OR DISAPPOINTED WITH HOW YOU RAN OVERALL? “I feel really good about it. I think we expected to be a little bit stronger than what we were, but you have to take it. Top fives are gonna win this championship. If we can run top five every week, that’s what we need to do.”

    TREVOR BAYNE – No. 16 Roush Fenway Racing Ford Mustang – “Man, I wanted a top five. You work hard for these things to get top fives and top threes and wins, but we were just trying to figure out how to get in there. We ran up front most of the day there, the last 150 laps, and then we had a bad caution and almost got a lap down there in the pits and we kept going instead of pitting. We lost a few spots of track position and never really got those back. It’s so hard to pass here, especially when you pull behind somebody. You lose the nose and you can’t pull under them and that’s what I was fighting at the end. I just got too tight behind other people when I tried to get by them, but, other than that, it was a pretty good day. A top six finish, it’s a solid finish for us after all our bad luck and bad things happening, so I’m pumped for my team and they did a really good job today.”

    THREE ROUSH FENWAY MUSTANGS IN THE TOP SIX. A GOOD DAY FOR THE ORGANIZATION. “Yeah, not too bad at all. It’s always good when you can get all three cars up there and have a good day all the way across the board. It’s what we’re working towards and now we’ve got to get them all in the top three next time.”

    RICKY STENHOUSE JR. PRESS CONFERENCE – “I wish it would have been a little bit better. Obviously, the finishing result was good for us from a points day, but we just never really had the car exactly the way we needed it. We were a little too tight and I thought it was gonna come to us. I thought the track would free up a little bit, but, really, it just lost overall grip and we stayed tight the whole day. We got a little bit better there on the last stop. The guys on pit road did an awesome job. We didn’t make any mistakes and really that’s what we need to do each and every week. We’re looking forward to Kansas and the race tracks we’ve got left. I wish we would have been a little bit better today, but a top five was definitely a good result for us.”

    DO YOU FEEL YOU’RE IN CONTROL OF THE POINTS RACE BEING UP 22 NOW? “I think we’re in control for sure, but we’ve got to control what we do. We’ve got to not make mistakes. We’ve got to bring good, fast race cars to the race track and I’ve got to do a good job of keeping out of the fence and keeping the fenders on it. So far we’ve done that and I think we’ve got a really good shot at this thing. I feel more comfortable right now even before coming into today. I felt comfortable coming into the day and obviously I feel a lot more comfortable afterwards, but I think we’ve got a race team that’s pretty determined to win this thing.”

    WERE YOU CONCERNED WITH ELLIOTT ON THE POLE? “No, I wasn’t concerned at all. Obviously, we figured he would lead a lap and get a point, but qualifying is not everything. We’ve qualified on the pole before and gone backwards, so I felt like overall we had a really good race car. We didn’t qualify as good as we wanted to, but if you look at it we were less than a tenth off the pole, so it’s not like they were that much faster, so we really weren’t concerned with him being on the pole.”

    DID TRACK CONDITIONS HELP YOU AT ALL? “We definitely had more speed, but it didn’t really change what the car was doing. The car was tight at the beginning of the race and we were running a certain lap time and then at the end of the race it would still be tight, but we were running faster lap times. Really, the handling of the car and what you had to start with was kind of what you ended up with.”

    CARL EDWARDS PRESS CONFERENCE

    CARL EDWARDS – No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang – “That was a great race. It all starts at the shop. These Ford Mustangs that they’ve been building are spectacular and Jack listened to us about two years ago, a year-and-a-half ago when we were telling him about all the different things we needed and he’s done a really good job and everybody has done a really good job of coming together and making these cars better. Today I had a very fast car. Anybody driving that car would have done really well. That was a lot of teamwork. The pit stops were great, the strategy was great and we hung on for the win. It was a lot of fun.”

    MIKE BEAM, Crew Chief – No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang – “Like Carl said, we really worked hard on the car and luckily we had a good place to start from the first race, but it was a lot different today than it was in the spring. Carl’s feedback was perfect and Scott, our engineer, he really works hard at this, so it worked out well. The guys did a great job on pit stops. We were on pit road when the caution came out, but, luckily, it worked out for us. Like Carl said, people have made a commitment to help us like Jack and Fastenal and Ford, and I’m glad we can produce for them.”

    CARL EDWARDS CONTINUED – “And this is the one-year anniversary of Mike and Scott Graves and I working together. That’s 10 wins in a year, so I really appreciate everything Mike and Scott have done.”

    JACK ROUSH, Car Owner – No. 60 Fastenal Ford Mustang – “Carl took my thunder. I was gonna congratulate the group, but it’s been a great team. We did look, there were some things obviously lacking in our program a year ago or a year-and-a-half ago. We were underachieving for the talent of everybody that was involved and we made some moves. The big thing was we put our Nationwide shop in the same location as the Cup shop so that the help Ford was giving us could come to bear and would reflect itself on all the cars that have an engineering impact. Mike has been able to use that to his advantage and Scott Graves has been a great help. Happily, Carl didn’t crack his noggin today on his backflip, so I think we’re still in pretty good shape for tomorrow.”

    CARL EDWARDS CONTINUED – “If I win tomorrow I’m not doing a backflip. There’s too much banking. I don’t like it.”

    WAS THIS RACE AS EASY AS IT LOOKED? “It was a lot less dramatic than the last one so that’s good. Early in the race it was easy. The car was really superior, but those guys worked on their cars and they got better and better. By the end of the race, that was all I had. Brad and Clint, I think if they had been out front it would have been very difficult to pass them, so I’m just grateful we were as good as we were and we had good enough pit stops and restarts and everything to stay in front.”

    JACK ROUSH CONTINUED – RICKY IS UP 22 POINTS WITH FIVE TO GO. HOW DO YOU ASSESS HIS CHANCES FOR WINNING THE TITLE? “Ricky is not doing what he wants to do. He wants to rub fenders and try to win these races right now and if he made that effort every time, he would be wrecked one time in four and, of course, that would be the end of his championship run. But he’s doing a great job. He’s frustrated with the fact that he can’t beat the Sprint Cup regulars that are in there consistently. He has beaten them a couple of times, but he’s doing what he needs to be doing. It’s not much fun for him right now, but he’s maturing by leaps and bounds. Trevor is doing a real nice job, too. It’s unfortunate he had his health problem he had earlier in the year or there would be a competition between the two of them.”

    IS THERE ANY PLAN TO GET RICKY IN A CUP CAR THIS YEAR OR NEXT YEAR OR DOES THE ECONOMY DICTATE THAT? “There’s no plan to get Ricky in a Cup car this year. There is certainly optimism that we’ll be able to do that next year, but we’re very much in negotiations with sponsors and next year is very fluid. I’m not gonna make a prediction on what’s gonna happen with regard to being able to get Ricky and Trevor more Cup time than they’ve had this year. We’re just glad we’ve got for Trevor what we have in the Wood Brothers car and hope we can get some time for Ricky next year, but it’s very much open based on the economy right now.”

    CAN YOU TALK ABOUT YOU AND CLINT BATTLING? WOULD YOU LIKE TO SEE THAT NEXT WEEK IN KANSAS? “That would be great. I know that race is really special for both of us. It was pretty neat. I was thinking about it while I was driving – for two modified racers from the Midwest to be out here running one and two racing at a place like Dover and driving for the car owners we’re driving for is pretty amazing. We’re very fortunate. That’s never more apparent to me than when I go to Kansas and I see a lot of the folks that I grew up with and a lot of folks I raced around for years. A win there would be huge. If we can pull off a win in the Nationwide car or the Cup car or both over there, that would be as big of a win as I’ve ever had.”

    MIKE BEAM CONTINUED – WHAT WAS THE DIFFERENCE TO GET THOSE 10 WINS WITH CARL? “We started here a year ago and then really worked hard. At Texas we won the race and that was the first time we beat Kyle and those guys. That got our confidence back and then we won Phoenix for two in a row. We started the season, and like Jack said, when we moved to Concord and Robbie and his engineering group down there, and the tools we had to work with, it’s like a bunch of kids in a candy store. We just really went after it and we’re really living a dream here because we have everything we could possibly have to work with. With Robbie’s help and the engineering group there, that’s been one of the biggest things for us. Ford, with the wind tunnel and stuff like that, and working for Jack and Roush Fenway just sitting in the meetings to draw off the Cup guys certain things that we can apply to our car helps.”

    CARL EDWARDS CONTINUED – WHAT DO YOU ATTRIBUTE YOUR SUCCESS ON CONCRETE TO? “Concrete demands a perfect car and a perfect setup and it lets you really tune things in to a very small window. I think the communication I have with Mike and Bob and the ability of the engineers to work with us is what makes us fast on concrete. It’s a very precise surface and I believe that communication is the key.”

    WHAT HAPPENS IN THE STANDS WHEN YOU GO UP THERE? “I signed one Subway car up there. That was pretty cool. The neat thing is just to see the looks on people’s faces. There was one guy up there that I’ll think about the rest of tonight. He’s got all my gear on and he was just pumped. H was really, really excited, so it’s neat to be able to go up there. Like I’ve said before, I think other drivers should go up there and have some fun with it. That’s not my deal. It’s something that’s really neat that everybody should try.”

    JACK ROUSH CONTINUED – WHAT’S A BETTER CAR, THE MUSTANG OR FUSION? “Well, it depends on how many people you want to carry. I don’t think we’ve got 40 mile per gallon Mustangs yet, but we’ve got 40 mile per gallon Fusions. I’ve got one of each with my coach that I take to the races. We’ve got a Roush Supercharged Mustang.”

    CARL INTERJECTS – “They are the envy of the motorhome lot. It’s some pretty neat stuff.”

    JACK CONTINUES – “And I’ve got a Fusion with 40,000 miles on it that if I ever got rid of it Brenda says that she’d leave me.”

    WHAT ABOUT THE RACE CAR? “Oh, the race car. I’m more interested to see if I can help Ford Motor Company sell cars I can have more race cars, so that comes first. The Nationwide cars are really good right now and I think we’re enjoying, in comparison to the field, a better, I won’t say dominance, but I’ll say a better parity on all the race tracks, although at this point in the season we’ve got the best Chase cars that we’ve ever had across our entire group. The Fusion has come of age. There is no doubt that we’ve got equal aerodynamics and we’ve got equal engines and we’ve got equal kinematics in our suspension and those things, I think, gives me confidence to go to the race track and feel like I won’t be embarrassed and I think it helps Carl and the crew chiefs as well feel like if they cannot get out-crew chiefed and if Carl cannot get out-driven, then the cars will be enough to do the job.”

  • TOYOTA NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes Dover International Speedway

    TOYOTA NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) Post-Race Notes & Quotes Dover International Speedway

    Ryan Truex (eighth) was the highest finishing Toyota driver in Saturday’s NASCAR Nationwide Series (NNS) race at Delaware’s Dover International Speedway.

    Truex’s eighth-place result was his fourth top-15 finish in as many races driving for Joe Gibbs Racing.

    Camry drivers Brian Scott (11th), Michael Annett (12th), Joey Logano (13th), Kenny Wallace (16th), Steve Wallace (20th) and Joe Nemechek (30th) were also in the field at the one-mile concrete oval.

    Five Camry drivers are currently in the top-15 in the unofficial NNS point standings following 29 of 34 races in the 2011 season — K. Wallace (seventh), S. Wallace (eighth), Scott (ninth), Annett (10th), and Nemechek (14th).

    RYAN TRUEX, No. 20 Heinz Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 8th How was your race today? “Well, we had a great day. Qualified fifth. Ran top-five the whole day. Had a really good pit stop and got up to third and we ran behind the 60 (Carl Edwards) and the 33 (Clint Bower) for a while there. They were really fast. I was just trying to keep up with them. We were able to run with them for a little while, but they had really good cars. We ran third for a while, pitted under green and the caution came out and kind of got us off sequence there. Got the wave around and got stuck behind a few lap cars, so I think we deserve to be at least top-five. We had a good enough car. Everyone worked really hard to give me a good car this weekend. It’s great when you can go out there and have good cars and run like that, but it’s kind of disappointing when you don’t finish where you know you should have.”

    Did you leave anything on the table today? “I didn’t leave anything on the table. I drove that thing as hard as I could when I was following Clint (Bowyer) and Carl (Edwards) up there. I couldn’t catch him. Yeah, bad luck, like he said. Can’t do nothing about that. Two months ago if I was sitting up here in eighth I would have been ecstatic and now I’m disappointed about that, so I’ve got to be grateful for where I’m at and the opportunities I’ve got.”

    BRIAN SCOTT, No. 11 Shore Lodge Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 11th How was your race? “We had a really fast No. 11 Shore Lodge Toyota. We needed a couple pit stops to make it better and the guys did exactly that — we got it better. We fought never having track position all day, but a couple long green flag runs and some killer pit stops by our guys put us up there in the mix. I think we got in the sixth, seventh range like that coming to green flag stops. I just came in a little hot and couldn’t get it slowed down without locking the front brakes up. We hit a water barrel and went a lap down because of that, got the wave around and then we just fought track position. We were fast but we had to deal with cars that were two laps down, cars that we hadn’t raced all day that were a lap down that had then caught back up with us because of our incident. It’s unfortunate that what should have been a top-10 day easily, possibly a top-five day, now we finished 11th.”

    MICHAEL ANNETT, No. 62 Pilot Travel Centers Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing Finishing Position: 12th

    JOEY LOGANO, No. 18 SportClips Toyota Camry, Joe Gibbs Racing Finishing Position: 13th

    KENNY WALLACE, No. 09 Federated Auto Parts Toyota Camry, RAB Racing with Brack Maggard Finishing Position: 16th

    STEVE WALLACE, No. 66 5-Hour Energy Toyota Camry, Rusty Wallace Racing Finishing Position: 20th

    JOE NEMECHEK, No. 87 NEMCO Toyota Camry, NEMCO Motorsports Finishing Position: 30th

  • Roush Fenway Dominates Monster Mile in Nationwide Series Race

    Roush Fenway Dominates Monster Mile in Nationwide Series Race

    Edwards leads three Roush Fenway Ford Mustangs in top-six at Dover

    Stenhouse Jr. builds NNS points leads to 22; five races remain

    DOVER, Del. (Oct. 1, 2011) – Roush Fenway Racing’s Carl Edwards turned in a truly dominating performance in Saturday’s Nationwide Series race at Dover International Raceway, leading 179 of 200 laps en route to sweeping both NNS races at “The Monster Mile” in 2011. It marked the 16th NASCAR win for Roush Fenway at Dover and its fifth in the NNS.

    Edwards led a trio of Roush Fenway Ford Mustangs in the top six. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. finished fifth – extending his Nationwide Series points lead – while Trevor Bayne posted a strong showing in a sixth-place finish.

    “I have to thank Fastenal; we really appreciate these guys being on board,” said Edwards in victory lane. “This series is so much fun and this track is so much fun,” added Edwards. “Everything went very well today, except my back flip; I was a little nervous about doing it on the banking there. My (Sprint) Cup car is very, very good. Hopefully we can get a win another win in that Aflac Ford tomorrow.”

    With the finish Stenhouse Jr. leads the Nationwide Series point standings by 22, with only five races remaining in 2011.

    “We just kept working on it all day,” said Stenhouse. “It was a solid day for us in the points. We have to keep running top five and that is what we were able to do today. We didn’t have the best car, but we kept working on the Blackwell Angus Ford and were able to get a solid finish out of it.”

    It was Edwards 36th career Nationwide win and his ninth NNS win on concrete. It marked his seventh win this season in the NNS and his 10th NASCAR win in 2011. It is Roush Fenway’s 10th Nationwide win in 2011 and its 122nd career Nationwide Series win. Roush Fenway has now won 14 races this season in NASCAR action.

    Roush Fenway returns to action at Dover for tomorrow’s (Oct. 2) Sprint Cup race. The race is set for 2:00 p.m. EDT and will be televised live on ESPN.

  • Carl Edwards Conquers Concrete Monster for Nationwide Win

    Carl Edwards could now be dubbed ‘King of the Concrete’ after a conquering win at the Monster Mile in the 26th Annual OneMain Financial 200 NASCAR Nationwide Series race.

    [media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”230″][/media-credit]The driver of the No. 60 Fastenal Ford even did his trademark victory back flip, although not quite sticking the landing due to the high banking at Dover International Speedway.

    “My back flip was terrible,” Edwards said. “I was nervous doing it on the banking. I’m not going to do it tomorrow if I win because there is too much banking.”

    Edwards also made his traditional foray into the crowds to celebrate his victory. On the way, he signed one fan’s Subway car and received plenty of congratulations.

    “There was one guy up there that had all my gear on and he was just pumped,” Edwards said. “It’s just neat up there and all the drivers should try it.”

    This was Edwards’ seventh win of the season. But more important, this was Edwards’ ninth win on the concrete, scoring him a perfect driver rating.

    “That was a great race,” Edwards said. “It all starts at the shop because these Ford Mustangs are spectacular.”

    “That was a very fast car,” Edwards continued. “Pit stops were great. Strategy was great. And we hung on for the win.”

    Mike Beam, Edwards’ crew chief, echoed his driver’s sentiments.

    “We really worked hard on the car,” Beam said. “Carl’s feedback was perfect. It worked out well.”

    Team owner Jack Roush praised the chemistry of the team, as well as all of the members of the group that works on the car.

    “It’s been a great team,” Roush said on the one year anniversary of the team coming together. “We put our Nationwide shop in the same location as the Cup shop. So, the help that Ford was giving would help all of the teams.”

    “Thankfully, Carl didn’t crack his noggin on his back flip.”

    Brad Keselowski, driver of the No. 22 Ruby Tuesday Dodge, finished second.

    “I almost felt like we were first in class until the restarts,” Keselowski said. “We did a great job with our Ruby Tuesday Dodge Challenger.”

    “Carl was just way faster than anyone else,” Keselowski continued. “We weren’t as good as Carl was.”

    “I thought we were going to steal one with strategy but it wasn’t meant to be,” Keselowski said. “We just didn’t have enough for him today.”

    Clint Bowyer, behind the wheel of the No. 33 Rheem Heating Cooling and Water Heating Chevrolet, scored the third spot in the finishing order.

    “I was pretty sure we weren’t first in class,” Bowyer said with a chuckle. “The caution came out and took two tires and then we had to take four and lost a lot of track position.”

    “We just got beat up on pretty bad,” Bowyer continued. “Carl was fast and he was the class of the field.”

    Ryan Truex, driving the No. 20 Heinz 57 Sauce Toyota, was the race’s top finishing rookie, bringing his race car home in eighth position. Not to be confused with his brother, Cup driver Martin Truex, Jr., Ryan still showed the same affinity for his local, home track.

    “I don’t appreciate being called Martin,” Truex said in the media center when he was incorrectly introduced. “But we had a great day.”

    “The caution got us off sequence,” Truex continued. “We deserved to be top five.”

    “It’s great when you can have good cars and run like that but it’s disappointing when you don’t get the finish you thought you should.”

    Probably the luckiest driver on the track for this Nationwide race was Reed Sorenson, driver of the No. Dollar General Chevrolet, who finished seventh.

    Sorenson benefitted from a NASCAR error where he should have gone to the rear of the field due to pitting too early, however, NASCAR failed to get the information to him in a timely manner.

    “I didn’t know what was going on,” Sorenson said. “I knew a lot of cars had to do the wave around. I don’t think it would have affected where we finished.”

    “I don’t know what the problem was but all in all it was a top-10 day for the Dollar General car.”

    Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., driving the No. 6 Blackwell Angus Ford, scored a top five finish. But more important, he came out of the Monster Mile with the points lead, 22 points over Elliott Sadler.

    “I wish I would have been a little bit better,” Stenhouse Jr. said. “We just never had the car the way we needed it.”

    “We stayed tight the whole day,” Stenhouse continued. “We didn’t make any mistakes and that’s what we need to do each and every week.”

    “A top five is definitely a good result for us.”

    Stenhouse Jr. now sees himself and his team as in control of the championship competition.

    “I think we’re in control for sure but we have to control what we do,” Stenhouse, Jr. said. “I’ve got to keep it out of the fence and keep the fenders on it.”

    “We’ve got a real good shot at this thing,” Stenhouse said. “We have a race team that’s pretty determined to win this thing.”

    No doubt, Elliott Sadler, who had started from the pole position in his No. 2 OneMain Financial Chevrolet, was the most disappointed driver coming out of the Monster Mile. Sadler finished fourteenth, trailing Stenhouse Jr. in the point standings.

    “We were a little bit too loose with the cloud cover,” Sadler said. “My car would get too free. As soon as we pitted, the caution came out and it put us in a bigger hole.”

    Sadler, however, is still hopeful about his championship hopes.

    “We got five races left and anything can happen,” Sadler said. “I got to do a better job in practice for how I like it in practice to be able to get into Victory Lane.”

    “We just have to find that next level and we will have to win a race or two to get back into this.”

    ——–

    Unofficial Race Results
    OneMain Financial 200, Dover International Speedway
    http://www.speedwaymedia.com/n2s/race.php?race=29
    =========================================
    Pos. No. Driver Make Points
    =========================================
    1 2 60 Carl Edwards Ford 0
    2 8 22 Brad Keselowski Dodge 0
    3 4 33 Clint Bowyer Chevrolet 0
    4 7 38 Kasey Kahne Chevrolet 0
    5 6 6 Ricky Stenhouse Jr. Ford 39
    6 9 16 Trevor Bayne Ford 38
    7 19 32 Reed Sorenson Chevrolet 37
    8 5 20 Ryan Truex * Toyota 36
    9 13 19 Mike Bliss Chevrolet 35
    10 14 31 Justin Allgaier Chevrolet 34
    11 11 11 Brian Scott Toyota 33
    12 18 62 Michael Annett Toyota 32
    13 3 18 Joey Logano Toyota 0
    14 1 2 Elliott Sadler Chevrolet 31
    15 16 88 Aric Almirola Chevrolet 29
    16 10 9 Kenny Wallace Toyota 28
    17 15 7 Jamie McMurray Chevrolet 0
    18 23 51 Jeremy Clements Chevrolet 26
    19 17 30 Jason Leffler Chevrolet 25
    20 12 66 Steve Wallace Toyota 24
    21 22 81 Blake Koch * Dodge 23
    22 42 15 Timmy Hill * Ford 22
    23 31 39 Fain Skinner Ford 21
    24 27 14 Eric McClure Chevrolet 20
    25 39 89 Morgan Shepherd Chevrolet 19
    26 41 28 Derrike Cope Dodge 18
    27 37 52 Kevin Lepage Chevrolet 17
    28 36 70 Casey Roderick Chevrolet 16
    29 21 1 Mike Wallace Chevrolet 16
    30 24 87 Joe Nemechek Toyota 14
    31 25 23 Scott Riggs Chevrolet 13
    32 33 171 Matthew Carter Ford 12
    33 40 40 Josh Wise Chevrolet 11
    34 34 175 Carl Long Ford 10
    35 35 141 Johnny Chapman Chevrolet 9
    36 38 49 Mark Green Chevrolet 8
    37 26 104 Kelly Bires Ford 7
    38 20 147 Charles Lewandoski * Chevrolet 6
    39 43 146 Chase Miller Chevrolet 5
    40 30 142 Tim Andrews Chevrolet 0
    41 28 182 Scott Wimmer Dodge 3
    42 32 150 T.J. Bell Chevrolet 0
    43 29 44 Jeff Green Chevrolet 1
  • Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NNS Race Final – Dover 2

    Dodge Motorsports Notes & Quotes – NNS Race Final – Dover 2

    Saturday, Oct. 1, 2011

    Dodge Motorsports PR

    NASCAR Nationwide Series

    Dover International Speedway

    OneMain Financial 200

    Post-Race Quotes

    BRAD KESELOWSKI (No. 22 Ruby Tuesday Dodge Challenger) Finished Second “We fought hard all day. I thought that we might steal one. When the yellow flag came out, we just missed keeping the 60 car (Carl Edwards) back there. All and all, it was a good day for the Ruby Tuesday Dodge Challenger. We just needed a little bit more speed.”

    YOU GUYS MADE A BIG SWING AT THE CAR ON THAT LAST PIT STOP, BUT JUST CAME UP SHORT TO CARL? “I almost felt that we were first-in-class. The Roush cars are just so much faster then everybody right now. I thought that it was all handling until the restarts and then Carl (Edwards) just motored. We did a great job with our Ruby Tuesday Dodge Challenger. We had some great strategy. We just came up a bit short.”

    YOU’VE WON ON THIS TRACK BEFORE; ANYTHING THAT YOU CAN TAKE FROM TODAY AND APPLY TO TOMORROW? “There’s always something to be learned, whether it’s in the car or the car itself. Hopefully, we’ve created enough of a culture at Penske Racing where the two crew chiefs can communicate to do that from the Nationwide to the Cup side. There’s always something to be learned. Sometimes you learn things that you don’t even realize that you’ve learned. Our Dodge was fast today. Hopefully, it carries over to tomorrow.”

  • Ricky Stenhouse, Jr. and Timmy Hill Both Pursue Nationwide Dreams

    Ricky Stenhouse, Jr., driver of the No. 6 Blackwell Angus/Cargill Ford Mustang for Roush Fenway Racing, and Timmy Hill, behind the wheel of No. 15 Poynt.com Ford Mustang for Rick Ware Racing, have more than just driving for the same manufacturer in common.

    [media-credit id=62 align=”alignright” width=”237″][/media-credit]Both young, up and coming drivers are pursuing their NASCAR dreams, one for a Nationwide championship and the other for the youngest ever Nationwide Rookie of the Year title.

    Stenhouse Jr., who won the Nationwide ROTY honors last year, is 23 years old while Hill is just 18 years of age, with his highest achievement being the Allison Legacy Series Championship.

    For Stenhouse, the achievement of the NASCAR Nationwide championship would be a dream come true.

    “It would mean a lot,” Stenhouse said. “It would definitely be my biggest accomplishment ever in my racing career.”

    “After the way last year went, struggling so bad the first part of the year and turning it around at the end of the year, it really makes you appreciate where we are right now as a race team,” Stenhouse continued.

    “We came into the year thinking that we were gonna be able to run for it and now that we’ve got six races left and have a shot at it, it’s exactly where we need to be.”

    Similarly for Hill, the Nationwide Rookie of the Year title would be just as good as the championship would be to Stenhouse, Jr. And if he won those coveted rookie honors, Hill would make history as the youngest ROTY at the tender age of 18 years.

    “It would be awesome for me to be the youngest one to do it,” Hill said. “We just hoped at this time in the year to have a shot at the Rookie of the Year and everything has worked out.”

    “We’re leading now by just two points.”

    For both drivers, achieving their respective dreams will be tough, especially with the level of competition. Stenhouse, Jr. is battling veteran Elliott Sadler, driver of the No. 2 OneMain Financial Chevrolet, for the Nationwide title, while Hill is battling Blake Koch, driver of the No. 81 DayStar.com Dodge, for the ROTY honors.

    “I think you have to be on your game,” Stenhouse, Jr. said. “You have to go out and try to win because Elliott Sadler is not gonna finish outside of the top 10.”

    “So, you’ve got to do something better to beat him in this championship.”

    “It’s close,” Hill echoed. “Blake has been right there and we’ve been right beside each other almost every race.”

    “It’s a real tight battle, but hopefully we can hang on to it,” Hill continued. “We hope to finish that deal out.”

    Both dream chasing drivers share a very similar background, having started in go-kart racing, as well as continuing through the ARCA ReMax Racing Series. Hill, in particular, has racing in his blood from watching his father, Jerry Hill, race in the Truck Series for many years.

    “My dad ran Truck Series and the Busch Series back then, Nationwide Series now,” Hill said. “He ran a full season of Trucks in 2003 and that was his last season.”

    “I kept bugging him when I was a kid that I wanted to race,” Hill continued. “Finally he said OK and he put me in a go kart and let me try it out.”

    “The first race, I loved it and I was instantly hooked.”

    One interesting thing that the two drivers on their dream quests share, however, is actually a person. Both have ties to Cup Chase contender Carl Edwards.

    For Stenhouse, Jr. his tie to Carl is that of teammates both seeking a championship. As Stenhouse chases the Nationwide championship, he is also cognizant of getting Edwards, in the No. 60 Fastenal Ford, the owner championship for Jack Roush.

    “Jamie Allison from Ford came in this week and we’ve got a lot of things going,” Stenhouse, Jr. said. “We’re obviously going for the driver’s championship.”

    “We’ve got to get Carl the owner’s championship and then we’ve got to get Ford the manufacturer’s championship,” Stenhouse continued. “Ford is putting a lot of effort into it and we’ve got a lot of things to accomplish this year and I think we can do it as a race team.”

    For Hill, Carl Edwards is not teammate but hero.

    “A guy I like to pattern myself after is Carl Edwards,” Hill said. “He handles himself real well and I like the way he treats his fans.”

    “Almost everything he does I like to pattern myself after.”

    The two young up and comers also share one unfortunate aspect to their careers. They both are uncertain of what their future holds.

    “Right now, my biggest focus is this Nationwide championship,” Stenhouse, Jr. said. “I think I’ve always said after running a couple of years in Nationwide I would like to run maybe a partial schedule or something just to kind of get my feet wet.”

    “But I don’t want to jump into things too quick.”

    “I may go to college next year,” Hill said, who just graduated high school. “I just want to focus on racing. I just want to keep my focus right now on the Rookie of the Year battle.”

    So, for now, both Stenhouse, Jr. and Hill realize that the road to achieving their dreams runs straight through the Monster Mile at Dover this weekend. Not unexpectedly, both drivers are confident that they will conquer the concrete track.

    “For us, every time I’ve come to Dover, we’ve had a better finish,” Stenhouse, Jr. said. “We finished fourth the last race here and had a really fast Mustang.”

    “I think, obviously, we’ll have a good race here.”

    “This is my second time here since the spring race,” Hill said. “So, we’ve got the experience and we’ve got the feel.”

    “The banking and the way it drops off makes it a monster,” Hill continued. “It’s a wild ride.”

     

  • Iowa Speedway Welcomes New Executive Management Team

    Iowa Speedway Welcomes New Executive Management Team

    Track Names Doug Fritz as CEO, Stan Clement As President

    NEWTON, Iowa — SEPTEMBER 30, 2011 — Doug Fritz, former president of Richmond International Raceway, has been named Chief Executive Officer of Iowa Speedway. Fritz, along with President Stan Clement, will lead Iowa Speedway’s long-term strategic initiatives, events and facilities development and capital reinvestments.

    “Iowa Speedway is one of the fastest-growing entertainment and motorsports venues in the country, and I’m thrilled to be joining their team,” says Fritz. “I’m really looking forward to working closely with the loyal race fans and supporters of Iowa Speedway, as well as the staff. Together, we will continue to elevate Iowa Speedway into a premier motorsports destination. The fans will always be our number-one priority, and we will continue to enhance their experience.”

    Conrad Clement, chairman of Iowa Speedway, believes Fritz’s industry knowledge will help position the track for record-breaking growth in 2012.

    “My family and I have known Doug for more than 20 years through our involvement with Featherlite Trailers,” says Clement. “We worked with him during his previous role at NASCAR as Senior Director of Marketing and Business Development, and most recently, while President of Richmond International Raceway. Doug has 25 years of experience in the motorsports industry and his career has been marked by outstanding accomplishments. We have witnessed his abilities and successes first-hand, and we are very excited to have him as a senior executive on our team.”

    According to Iowa Speedway co-owner and NASCAR racing legend Rusty Wallace, Fritz has an amazing ability to promote events. “He is able to connect with fans, sponsors and competitors to make a race truly special. He’s definitely an industry leader and will take Iowa Speedway to the next level.”

    Next year’s schedule includes two NASCAR Nationwide, two NASCAR Camping World Truck and two NASCAR K&N Pro Series races; plus stops from the IZOD IndyCar, ARCA Series, USAC and ASA Midwest Tour. Season ticket renewal packets are in the mail and are available immediately online at www.iowaspeedway.com. For more information please call 866-RUSTY-GO.

    About Iowa Speedway

    Iowa Speedway is a state-of-the-art 7/8 mile asphalt paved tri-oval race track and motorsports facility located just 30 miles east of Des Moines at I-80 Exit 168 in Newton , Iowa . The track is owned and operated by U.S. Motorsport Corporation and designed by former NASCAR Champion Rusty Wallace, now an anchor and analyst for ABC-TV/ESPN. Iowa Speedway is designed for year-round use and includes 30,000 permanent grandstand seats. Call 1-866-RUSTY-GO, visit www.iowaspeedway.com, “like” us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter at @IowaSpeedway to learn more.